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标题: 关于隐私谷歌知道的比你多 [打印本页]

作者: 吹胡子邓眼    时间: 2017-5-9 12:09
标题: 关于隐私谷歌知道的比你多
如果你愿意,谷歌可以曝光你所有的生活。5 R: n- t5 ^. l8 L* [& I

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你去哪儿,做什么,你是哪个球队的粉丝或哪个饭馆是你的菜,以及那些在午夜困扰你的问题,比如为什么狗吃草,所有这些信息都可以从你在网上搜索中收集到。让我们模拟一下,看看谷歌是如何监视你的。( ~. P: m/ h3 w. i
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这些数据存储在谷歌,被用来了解你是一个什么样的人,预测你想干什么,看什么。它们主要被用来吸引公告公司,从公告中专更多的钱。它们还被Google Now利用。3 B; g* @6 t. Q4 _  G0 v$ i
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这个聪明的搜索引擎甚至比你自己更了解你想知道什么。如果你用安卓手机,私人助理软件已经在你的手机里了。如果你是iPhone用户,你可以在谷歌应用软件中找到它。8 w7 j0 F9 J8 u3 r8 g' {

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2 q8 Y9 V' u; J1 R! {那么Google Now可以干吗?
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0 _# t$ }/ ~: @0 ^& X) ~/ Y0 s比如现在是周一下午5点。你马上要下班开车回家。你拿起手机,Google Now提示你现在高速有点儿小堵,要25分钟到家。
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. h1 `, s7 Q8 ~! {  a4 ^! A到家后,它显示电影《龙虎少年队2》的放映时间,这是因为你已经用谷歌查了一个星期了。除此以外,它还通过你的地点历史记录,了解到你经常在周一晚上去电影院。
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当你正在影院看电影,你所支持的球队,东区的龙队横扫西区的虎队,Google Now会即时告诉你比分和形势。
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回到家,上床前,你想知道墨尔本天气情况,因为你明天将飞到那里出差。Google Now 会提醒你航班号和去机场的最佳路线。
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+ L8 L$ p8 f5 O* E) J% WGoogle Now是怎么知道这些的呢?它是通过谷歌收集到关于你的数据:
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- `+ G# I9 r, X7 P; ^) p1.        你对什么感兴趣:你喜欢孟非,山羊,NBA灌篮高手吗?谷歌知道你喜欢。你迷恋哪首歌,你特别想看哪部电影?谷歌全都知道。它用你在YouTube里看什么来作出你的档案。然后根据你的档案来提醒你,比如你所喜爱的乐队到你镇子里或最近的动物园在哪里。
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- e* e9 U0 X3 d; _2.        你在想什么:你可能在想你车子发出奇怪的噪音,或你想知道现在伦敦时间,谷歌知道你在想的所有的事情。包括你想知道的有关性的问题。* K% s2 U; c# f3 q. H: l1 K

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" Z# G' w. _& s6 e3.        你住在哪儿,你曾经去过哪儿,还有你要去哪儿:最令你不安的是,谷歌掌握这些。只要你随身携带手机,谷歌可以知道所有你去过的地方。! H8 b) i& [2 U( t5 h  n+ Y, s
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应用GPS,手机,和无线局域网信号,谷歌可以根据你何时去过何地,发现你在哪儿工作,你在哪儿居住以及你的另一半生活在哪儿。谷歌知道你是坐火车,开车,还是骑车上班。你哪天买吃的用的。如果你经常去健身房或当地小酒馆,谷歌会告诉你当地的天气。
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谷歌每时每刻都在查收你的谷歌邮件以发现你要做的下一件事情,这可能是一张体育比赛票,一张机票,或你已经订餐的饭馆。谷歌都会发现它们,并给你提供相关信息。
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) u& n: j2 @' E# ?$ }0 W; d它的跟踪功能可以把地图上的点和线连接起来,做出你的行踪图,这样你就可以看出你的日常生活轨迹或上个假期的度假线路。
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如果以上这些,让你有些不放心,不要惊慌失措。谷歌不是像有些人想象的那样,把你找寻的主题词保存下来,然后通知全世界。正像在隐私宣言中陈述的,谷歌保留你的搜索主题词以便更好地建立你的档案,从而使搜索结果更符合你。其实它是边工作边学习,进一步提炼出与你相关的结果,使你不用在结果中费力寻找答案。) O8 ?# w, C# l

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: f% P9 e- l& H当然,你可以在谷歌帐户里把地点历史记录关掉,或删除记录。
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现在,谷歌已经放弃了2007年曾经承诺的尊重用户隐私的条款,移除了“除非用户同意,否则不会将DoubleClick cookie信息和个人身份信息结合起来”的声明,这意味着Google会将用户个人信息用于针对性的广告。

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DoubleClick是谷歌的广告服务平台,是该网站收入的最主要来源。在上述条款修改事宜被公开之后,Google发表声明称它目前不会使用Gmail关键词进行定向投放广告,但很快被微软揭露:

2012年11月时,微软称Google购物的搜索结果中全部都是根据用户的隐私信息而做的广告,而不是真实、公平的网络购物搜索结果。这一次,微软再次对Gmail下手,声称其侵犯用户隐私,根据用户邮件内容作广告,超越隐私底线。

近日,微软制作了一个名为http://www.scroogled.com/Shopping/(搞砸Google点康姆)的网站来揭露Google公司严重侵犯用户隐私的事实。在这个网站上,你还可以参加一个名为“告诉Google不要乱来”的活动,向Google公司发送邮件要求其禁止侵犯隐私。除了批评Google,网站上更多的内容是在向用户推销Outlook。

在这个网站上,微软列出了Google公司侵犯用户隐私、检索每一封发送和接受的电子邮件的劣迹,并用真是案例揭露Google购物为纯广告。“Google检查你在Gmail上发送、接收的每一封邮件,检索内容以发现关键字,这样才能在Gmail里显示付费广告。而且到目前为止没有方法或者选项禁止Google公司来侵犯你的隐私!”网站视频还举例子说邮件中出现了“猫咪”这个词汇,然后Gmail出现广告“免费动物检查券!”,然而邮件的内容是说自己最喜欢的猫去世了,这让用户十分恼火。

微软的言论大部分是正确的,但是目前确实有办法不让Google来检索电子邮件,比如说使用简易HTML版,或者使用第三方客户端,或者每年花50美元使用付费版。Google公司此前曾经说过,它在检索用户邮件时是有底线的,既保护用户又提供广告。

2010年,施密特说过:“我把这条线成为恐怖线。Google的隐私政策能保证刚好在这条线上而不越过。”即便这般侵犯用户隐私,Gmail用户还是不忍离去。目前,每个月仍旧有4.25亿活跃用户在使用Gmail。

微软正式利用了Gmail侵犯用户隐私这个短处。在Outlook的宣传语中写道:“Outlook.com优先考虑你的隐私。你在邮箱中不会看到任何和邮件内容中的关键词有关的广告。你的电子邮件不会被任何人利用。但是Google利用你的电子邮件来做广告生意。Google检索你发送和接受的每一封电子邮件。”

经过我们的测试,Outlook.com中确实没有出现和邮件关键词有关的广告,几乎没有侵犯用户的隐私。界面也作的非常简洁易用,但是单靠“不侵犯隐私”这样的宣传方法能让Gmail用户回头吗?


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While other cloud storage vendors go out of their way to assure you privacy, Google Drive pretty much does quite the opposite, in language hidden in plain sight, right in the EULA. You should carefully read and consider this paragraph before storing anything private on your Google Drive.
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“When you upload or otherwise submit content to our Services, you give Google (and those we work with) a worldwide license to use, host, store, reproduce, modify, create derivative works (such as those resulting from translations, adaptations or other changes we make so that your content works better with our Services), communicate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute such content. The rights you grant in this license are for the limited purpose of operating, promoting, and improving our Services, and to develop new ones. This license continues even if you stop using our Services …”
Granting themselves the right to “publicly display” my documents goes well beyond “the limited purpose of operating … and improving our Services, and to develop new ones”. I removed the word “promoting” from that sentence, which hardly sounds limited in purpose. To that I strongly object.

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There will be an outcry about this, expect them to back off and limit the scope of this travesty. Just be careful what you upload until Google steps back from the dark side of this issue.
You might consider creating an encrypted/password protected, read/write disk image using Mac’s Disk Utility and copy that over to your cloud storage — which you can hide more sensitive documents in. Only you have the key/password, so make it strong and do not forget it! You’d have to open that image (but not download it) each time to read from or write into it and close it afterwards — but it’s contents will be hidden from server side search. Opening such an encrypted image can only be done from a Mac, not an iPhone nor iPad.
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If you think about it, Google is in the business of selling targeted advertising against things it is able to sniff out about you through search. What better place to learn more about your interests and needs than snooping through your private documents? Gmail was a good start, now your digital filing cabinet could be next.
Don’t be surprised when a breath freshener advertisement pops up in Google Ads based on an OCR’d photo of a dentist’s bill, diagnosing halitosis — which you’re hiding from the world in your Google Drive. Just kidding, but you get my point!

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Link Google Terms of Service
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作者: 冰糖葫芦    时间: 2017-5-10 03:55
本帖最后由 冰糖葫芦 于 2017-5-10 04:00 编辑

欧盟六国称谷歌泄漏用户隐私
http://www.ithome.com/html/it/41682.htm

新华社电 欧洲联盟6个国家的数据保护机构2日对美国谷歌公司采取行动,以促使谷歌加强用户的隐私保护。

法国国家信息自由委员会2日说,谷歌没有在截止期限、即2月底前整改收集和储存诸如视频分享网站YouTube、“吉邮”电子邮箱服务和社交网站“谷歌+”用户数据的方式。

谷歌上月与一支由法国、英国、德国、意大利、荷兰和西班牙6国数据专员组成的特别工作小组会晤,试图就这一争议达成和解。

法国国家信息自由委员会在网站说:“会议过后,没有看见变化……因此,所有组成这一特别工作小组的机构在2013年4月2日以各自国家法律条款为基础采取行动。”英国信息监管局说,已经调查谷歌的隐私规定是否符合英国的《数据保护法案》。

27个欧洲国家的数据管理机构主管去年10月认定谷歌2012年3月发布的隐私规定不符合这些国家数据保护标准,要求谷歌在4个月内依据提供的建议做出整改。要求谷歌提供更多数据收集的信息,包括收集数据的目的。


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http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/04/11/how-europes-fight-with-google-over-privacy-ignores-real-privacy/





How Europe’s Fight with Google Over Privacy Ignores Real Privacy



by ALFREDO LOPEZ


Last week the governments of France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, and the United Kingdom fired a warning shot at Google and it appears they’re reloading the gun with real ammunition.

This past December, about a year after the Internet behemoth announced a new privacy policy, a working group of representatives from these countries called the policy grossly abusive of people’s privacy and said Google had four months to bring itself into compliance with European law. Google dismissed the ultimatum: “Our privacy policy,” it said, “respects European law and allows us to create simpler, more effective services.” The European countries response was that they will take actions, based on their national laws and in coodination with each other, by the Fall.

These government/corporation tiffs are frequent and their rhetorical fire normally turns into quickly dissipated smoke. This one could be different. It comes at a time when the world’s powerful are trying to decide how much privacy we people will have and what the term privacy actually means, and this squabble’s outcome will affect that and, of course, our freedom. That alone makes it worth watching.

But there’s something deeper here that transcends this conflict. Privacy is, in fact, a core component of democracy and any infringement on complete privacy is an obscene attack on the possibility of having a free and democratic society. As important as the outcome of this show-down might be, the most important and frightening development is that it’s taking place at all.

The political shoot-out began a year ago when Google announced that it was unifying about 60 privacy policy agreements, covering its myriad services, into one big one. The company explained that lumping together these “agreements” (the things you’re asked to read before pressing the “I Accept” button on a website) was a matter of efficiency and transparency. There’s a logic to that: how many privacy policies have you read on the Internet? One would assume that if you don’t read one, you can hardly be expected to read 60.

That, however, is a corporate shell game. Google made this move not to make our reading easier but to make gathering information about us more efficient. Google is a marketing company and nothing makes a marketing company more powerful and valuable to advertisers than having pertinent information on hundreds of millions of people all over the world. Its privacy policy is fitted to that purpose. It says that, once you sign up and begin using these services as an identified user, you give up that right of refusal. So, because people don’t read that privacy policy, they don’t realize that it effectively eliminates their privacy.

For a very long time, Google has known who uses each of its services and how, but now it knows which combination of services you use and how they interact with each other in your daily life. It also knows cities or towns of residence (and, in many cases, addresses) of its registered users, the IP addresses of their computers, their names (and often the names of their family members and friends), what they do on the Internet every day, what they buy and consider buying and, for those using Gmail, who they write to and what they write. It can hone in a your specific physical location with Goodgle Maps and will store that info if you map it. In fact, all this info is stored on Google’s databases with members’ tacit approval and Google’s complete understanding of what all this means.

“If you have something that you don’t want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn’t be doing it in the first place,” Google CEO Eric Schmidt said in 2009. “If you really need that kind of privacy, the reality is that search engines — including Google — do retain this information for some time and it’s important, for example, that we are all subject in the United States to the Patriot Act and it is possible that all that information could be made available to the authorities.”

The information Google holds rivals and in some cases surpasses the information most governments have on their own citizens. So when Google released this new policy which permits it to combine that information and use it for evaluation, marketing and advertising, these governments commissioned France’s CNIL to investigate.

That selection, in itself, is striking. The CNIL is an independent, government-supported authority that specializes in data privacy law enforcement. France has among the strongest data collection restrictions in the world and, while CNIL has often been criticized by advocates for being too sheepish in its advocacy, data protection “sheepishness” in France would be considered ferocity in many other countries.
Like a trained bulldog, CNIL investigated all the Google data policies for nine months and then presented its report. It was devastating, accusing Google of policies and mechanisms that effectively violate privacy laws in most European countries. Based on that report, 24 of the EU’s 27 data regulators wrote Google a letter last December proposing about a dozen changes: among them that Google shouldn’t collect information on users without their consent, combine information from different services without additional consent or use the data it collects for advertising.

The four months passed. “Google did not provide any precise and effective answers,” CNIL said last week. “In this context, the EU data protection authorities are committed to act and continue their investigations. Therefore, they propose to set up a working group, led by the CNIL, in order to coordinate their reaction, which should take place before summer.”

In the diplomatic jargon of international regulation, those are fighting words. “Coordinate their reaction” is something the European Union’s countries seldom do (witness their financial crisis) and they almost never make threats around technology. Action against Google in Europe could affect the company’s relationship with one of its largest markets and a critical marketing link in the world-wide chain that is the Internet. Google could be crippled. That’s what that statement threatens.

But let’s not kid ourselves. A capitalist government, like those in Europe, has a system to protect and, to do the protecting, its police agencies routinely use data collected on the Internet about its citizens. As Google’s Schmidt put it in 2010: “In a world of asynchronous threats it is too dangerous for there not to be some way to identify you. We need a [verified] name service for people. Governments will demand it.”

So the issue here isn’t really how to protect people’s privacy; it’s how to balance the various approaches to impinging on it. Google says it needs information about you to match its marketing to what you buy; governments say they need information about you to monitor and control what you do the rest of the time. They’re trying to work out how these two approaches to information gathering can co-exist and not conflict with each other.

If, for example, a particular policy draws too much public attention to this issue or provokes a large lawsuit or gets people asking why their government isn’t — or is — doing something, that’s a problem. The government will then find its own privacy policies in the spotlight. That’s only one way this balance can become unbalanced, but in any case balance is the issue being disputed. There is really no debate about whether or not you have a right to privacy on the Internet. As far both sides are concerned, you don’t, and both sides are most pleased if you’re not paying much attention to that fact.

It’s persistently perplexing how little most people care about this issue. Even many of the most politically conscious will often just shrug and say “there’s nothing that can be done about it”. After decades of increasing surveillance (oiled by a government-encouraged paranoia about terrorism) we expect the powerful of our society to know everything about us and, apparently, most of us can live with that. Some of us appear to think we can’t live without it.

But that battering of our democratic consciousness has not only lowered our guard against violations of our privacy; it has actually fostered a distorted understanding of what privacy actually is. Or better put: it’s convinced many of us that a small part of the privacy debate is the entire debate.

For purposes of the Internet, privacy is your ability to communicate with other people excluding anyone you want from that conversation and your ability to say what you want to those people (and listen to what they have to say) excluding people you don’t want listening.
Sure, what you say to your family or which websites you visit or what you consider buying on the Internet should, in a sane society, be your business and taking a snapshot of all this is a horrible personal violation. But the more dangerous violation is that, in establishing the means to eavesdrop on your life and honing the ability to store and analyze that information, powerful forces are systematically limiting what the Internet can be about.

What humanity created as a tool of freedom and, in many cases, struggle has been taken over by corporations and governments wielding lawsuits, imprisonment and largely unnoticed anti-freedom laws to pervert its original intent.

“When the Internet began…it was seen largely as a non-commercial oasis,” free-speech advocate and writer Robert McChesney told Democracy Now in a recent interview. “It was a place where people could go and be equal and be empowered as citizens to take on concentrated economic and political power, to battle propaganda…And there was no surveillance. People could do what they wanted and not be tracked.

“What’s been taking place…is that on a number of different fronts, extraordinarily large, monopolistic corporations have emerged: AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, at the access level; Google, Facebook, Apple, Amazon, at the application and use level. And these firms have changed the nature of the Internet dramatically…(and) they work closely with the government and the national security state and the military. They really walk hand in hand collecting this information, monitoring people, in ways that by all democratic theory are inimical to a free society.”
“Privacy” isn’t primarily individual and privacy laws aren’t in place only to address individual activities. In fact, you can’t be individually private on the Internet because then you wouldn’t be using the Internet. The privacy laws are there to make sure people can function in our exercise of free speech, exchange of information and association. They are, and always have been, a way to protect us from government inquiry and inquisition. Those laws that say a cop can’t just walk into your house and search it without a warrant or question you and those with you or keep close tabs on everything you do and who you do it with — those are privacy laws. They protect our collaborative activity from
government repression.

That collaborative activity is what the Internet has deepened and broadened. It lets us communicate with people all over the world involved in activities emanating from issues and concerns similar to ours. It lets people who are fighting for their rights in a country where such activity can get you jailed or killed talk to people world-wide who can support them. It permits coordination of struggles going on in vastly different environments in far-away countries. It cuts through our media’s lies about other countries with solid truth we learn from people in those countries. It helps unify us and helps us support each other in a rapid, almost immediate, way.

It’s what humanity needs and it’s the reason why the Internet now reaches two billion people.

But if the privacy is taken away, if a government or a corporation can read your email or follow you around as you visit and use websites, your use of the Internet for its most important political purpose becomes stored information that can be used to oppose and repress you.
Privacy, viewed that way, is the litmus test of a free environment. In that context, Google is a monster and the governments that are challenging it on such restricted grounds aren’t much better.

Yes, the progressive response to the European initiative on Google privacy should be to encourage it but with an understanding of its pitfalls and a loud outcry about them. Even if Europe has its way, the outcome will still be an erosion of our privacy and a further empowerment of those who would, in some situations, repress our movements for change.

So right now, those of us who are truly concerned about the future of this society and the world, need to place Internet privacy among our most prominent issues.

ALFREDO LOPEZ is the newest member of the TCBH! collective. A long-time political activist and radical journalist, and founding member of the progressive web-hosting media service MayFirst/PeopleLink, he lives in Brooklyn, NY






作者: 冰糖葫芦    时间: 2017-5-10 04:04
本帖最后由 冰糖葫芦 于 2017-5-10 04:09 编辑

Is it true that Google is stealing our data and personal information? Yes, How and why?


https://www.quora.com/Is-it-true-that-Google-is-stealing-our-data-and-personal-information


​Recently I read tthis article in the gujarati science magazine SAFARI. (Translation: Google's strategy: Give data, take Biodata. In return to providing the information Google steals our personal details.)

Is it true?


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6 Answers




Abhishek Tavasalkar, Google helps me live a rich lifestyle!
Answered 11 May 2016


Well you can't say 'stealing data'; as it wouldn't be an appropriate term. Most often because you didn't read their terms and conditions while opening an account with GMail, Android or while using applications that has Google's name all over it.
There's a saying that goes around in this Internet age, "If you're not paying for the product, you're not the customer, you're the product being sold."
(Yes go back and read their Terms and Conditions)
Well if you've ever wondered how Google happens to be such a big company when it provides almost all of its services for free. Look at your Android Smartphone, and see most of the apps that's on it are by Google and are totally free to use.
Even the OS Android that Google developed is open source and distributed for free, however Google spends Billions of Dollars on developing and perfecting the OS as well as its other services. Why?
Here's the answer.
Google is basically a Search Engine Company. However Google relies heavily on Advertisers to generate money for itself.
So yep, the data they collect about you (as you framed 'steal') is gathered and in a ready-made package sold to the advertisers (this data selling thing is very much complicated though and I'm interested explaining it here)


Moreover most of this data is also directly sold that helps other companies know more about you.
How should I frame it, "Google knows more about than anyone is this world, more even than yourself"
Google knows which places you've visited since the time you started using a smartphone and which route you've taken to get there and in how much time you've reached there.

For example, Google knows where I had been on Sunday of  October 13, 2013 between 8.47am-10.47am and can show me the exact route that I've taken.
Google Maps Has Been Tracking Your Every Move, And There’s A Website To Prove It




Moreover you check what all you did on Google by going to this link! - Your Personal Google Account History (you need to sign in though)
Well in our childhood we were always told that Do not do bad things as someone is watching us. Well guess what, Shit just got real and that someone is Google now.
Best of Luck! Have a great day ahead.

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Hasit Bhatt, CS Grad Student, IIT Madras
Answered May 11, 2016







Of course, that's true.
I'll start with a simple example. You enter a gift shop.
You : " I want to buy a gift for my sister. "
Shopkeeper : " Oh, great. How old is she? "
You : " XX years old. "
Shopkeeper : " Does she like dancing ? Then, there's this dancing doll which she might like. "
You : " Hmm.. No, I don't think so. She's more into photography, painting and abstract art. "
Shopkeeper : " Well, you can buy this art piece. "
You : " Well, but it's kind of costly. "
Shopkeeper : " Ok, try this. This is best for you. What name do you want to write it on?"
You : " To XYZ, From ABC. "
After 3 months, you go to the same shop.
You : " It's sister's day. I want to buy something for my sister. "
Shopkeeper : " She likes photography, right? This is new digital photo frame, which she might like. "
You : " This is exactly something which I wanted. Thanks "
Not to mention, you'll go there every time you need something to gift. This is called personalization in technical term. You need data for it.  Now, you may call that shopkeeper stole your data. He/She now knows your name, approximate age, your sisters name, her age, her hobbies, your approximate financial capability to an extent. So, coming to your answer, yes. Google does take your data,  to give you better results.
I'm not advocating for Google, but you can either ask for personalized results or you can live a private life. Your Choice.
Do they use it for wrong reasons? Well, I don't exactly know.
Can they use it wrong way? God damn, yes.


1k Views · 5 Upvotes












Chance Gardener
Answered Aug 13, 2016








Google ‘google maps stealing information’, add ‘accidentally’ if you like.
And from the ever reliable Daily Mail
542 Views · 1 Upvote










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Uday Mittal, Associate of (ISC)2 for CISSP, DCPP
Answered Jul 9, 2016


It's not stealing if we give it to them willingly.
Today, Google is present in almost all aspects of one's digital life. From a simple search to our homes. This kind of presence and advanced analytics capabilities available at present gives them critical insights into user's behaviour and patterns. How they use it is up to them.
Virtually, they can keep track of everything one does on the internet. They know what you search for when nobody's looking. If you use an Android phone, they know where you are and have the capability to go further.
495 Views · 1 Upvote · Answer requested by Brijesh Vekaria





Ashish Joshi, studied at Dr. Ambedkar Institute of Technology
Answered May 12, 2016


They dont need to steal anything. You yourself give your data to google. Be it e-mails, your location, search terms, google drive contents and much more. Also it is not feasible to explicitly read each and every persons data. They just use data mining approaches on their datacenters(which obviously contain your data) to find out useful patterns which can get them monetary benefits.391 Views · 2 Upvotes





Mattia Campagnano, InfoSecPro,CyberSecurity&Forensics+ UNIX Grad,Troubleshooter
Answered May 11, 2016



"Stealing" seems me a little exaggerated, but Google does track your searches, your location and other stuff.
In fact, I use DuckDuckGo as my search engine and use Chrome very seldom.
European courts have convicted Google for privacy violations. What's sure is Google monitors Gmail and Google Drive for files breaking the law and reports to law enforcement about criminal violations.

Beware!!! Even you have registered before, do not keep logging status, and remove it gradually yo keep you sefe!


作者: 吹胡子邓眼    时间: 2017-5-11 12:47

http://gawker.com/5800868/how-google-spies-on-your-gmail-account-and-how-to-stop-it



In Google's war with Facebook, Google's "don't be evil" motto could be a casualty. The search engine is now leveraging your private Gmail information to get an edge in the social networking wars. It's creepy.
Google is quietly mining your Gmail contacts database to figure out which competing social networks you belong to. When it discovers one, it "suggests" that you vacuum the outside account into your Google account so that Google can exploit the data within its own services. The practice of monitoring users' email address books to better compete with Facebook appears to be the furthest — and most arguably "evil" — step Google has yet taken with Gmail or indeed with any sensitive personal information with which it is entrusted.
It's also that kind of thing that scares the hell out of users. Gmail was already controversial back when all it did was automatically scan your email for keywords for targeting anonymous advertisements.
Business Insider discovered evidence of the data harvesting in the form of an obscure checkbox on a buried Google account preferences pane, which reads, "use my Google contact information to suggest accounts from other sites." By default, this box is checked, which means Google has been scanning your Gmail contacts, unless by some miracle you found this option, buried several clicks beyond your Gmail inbox, and disabled it. Business Insider wonders if Google might be scanning Gmail inboxes, looking for confirmation emails from various social networks.
According to [url=http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:3Z03XbH-nosJ:www.google.com/support/websearch ... hl=en&gl=us&strip=1]a Google "help" document[/url], that's not the case. But the behavior Google does publicly admit to is still disturbing; the company says it looks for "similarities between your connections" in your Gmail address book and in social networking accounts that Google thinks might belong to you. "For example," said the Google page, "Bob's Google Contacts have names that are very similar to the names of people he follows publicly on Twitter."
Bob's Google contacts are also private information. And they don't just include people Bob has expressly added as contacts; Gmail address books are automatically populated with "the 20 addresses you use most frequently."
Once Google finds a social networking account that might belong to you, it offers to "connect" the account to your Google account, saying the connection will help personalize and improve your Google search results, will make it easier for friends "to find the stuff you share on the web," and will optionally leave you with a Google profile that shows all your other accounts and ranks high in Google search results.
In other words, by combing through your Gmail contacts, Google makes it more likely you will participate in its own efforts to compete more effectively with its archrival Facebook. "They are doing this to assemble another copy of [your social] graph by scraping other sources, rather than making their own," a source told Business Insider.
In other words, Google is taking the intimate personal data in your Gmail account, using it to spy more effectively on you, and also using it for its own (hoped for) gain. That sounds pretty evil. Although the company doubtless has a canned response for why it took this step without asking permission first. Let us guess: To make Google even more awesome for us, the users. How sweet.
You can turn off contact spying by going to your Gmail account; clicking on your email address in the upper right corner of the screen; selecting "Account Settings" from the drop down menu; and then selecting "Connected accounts: View and manage your accounts from other services." Or you can try clicking here. The checkbox is at the bottom of the page.
Update: Google sent us a statement saying "we won't reveal your private connections to other users without your permission." They'll access them, and use them to find your other social media accounts, but they won't publish anything without your say so. (Yet.)
[Top image via Shutterstock; image of Gmail inbox via yyq123/Flickr]


作者: 吹胡子邓眼    时间: 2017-5-15 11:39
Google Tells Court You Cannot Expect Privacy When Sending Messages to Gmail -- People Who Care About Privacy Should Not Use Service, Consumer Watchdog Says
http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/ ... ail-people-who-care

SANTA MONICA, CA -- In a stunning admission contained in a brief filed recently in federal court, lawyers for Google said people should not expect privacy when they send messages to a Gmail account. Consumer Watchdog said today that people who care about their email correspondents’ privacy should not use the Internet giant’s service.
Google’s brief said: “Just as a sender of a letter to a business colleague cannot be surprised that the recipient’s assistant opens the letter, people who use web-based email today cannot be surprised if their emails are processed by the recipient’s [email provider] in the course of delivery. Indeed, ‘a person has no legitimate expectation of privacy in information he voluntarily turns over to third parties.’”  (Motion to dismiss, Page 19)
Read Google’s motion to dismiss here: http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/resources/googlemotion061313.pdf
“Google has finally admitted they don’t respect privacy,” said John M. Simpson, Consumer Watchdog’s Privacy Project director. “People should take them at their word; if you care about your email correspondents’ privacy don’t use Gmail.”
Google made the statement that people can’t expect privacy when sending a message to a Gmail address in a response to a class action complaint filed in multi-district litigation. The suit says Google violates federal and state wiretap laws when the company reads emails to determine what ads to serve based on the message’s content.  The class action complaint was filed under seal because it details many of Google’s business practices about the way it handles email.
A highly redacted version of the complaint was filed publicly.  Read it here: http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/resources/gmailcomplaint051613.pdf
A hearing in the case, In re Google Inc. Gmail Litigation, Case No. 5:13-md-02430-LHK, will be held before Judge Lucy H. Koh in U.S. District Court in San Jose, CA. at 1:30 p.m., Sept. 5.
“Google’s brief uses a wrong-headed analogy; sending an email is like giving a letter to the Post Office,” said Simpson.  “I expect the Post Office to deliver the letter based on the address written on the envelope.  I don’t expect the mail carrier to open my letter and read it.  Similarly when I send an email, I expect it to be delivered to the intended recipient with a Gmail account based on the email address; why would I expect its content will be intercepted by Google and read?”








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